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Frequency of use of non-prescribed medication among population sample from Al Madina City and its impact on quality of care in Saudi Arabia

OBJECTIVE: Self-medication can be defined as the practice of using drugs that have not been prescribed, recommended, or controlled by a certified health-care professional. This term can be used when discussing patients who use non-prescription medications to treat self-diagnosed disorders or symptom...

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Autor principal: Mahrous, Mohamed Saad
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Qassim Uninversity 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6124833/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30202401
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author Mahrous, Mohamed Saad
author_facet Mahrous, Mohamed Saad
author_sort Mahrous, Mohamed Saad
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description OBJECTIVE: Self-medication can be defined as the practice of using drugs that have not been prescribed, recommended, or controlled by a certified health-care professional. This term can be used when discussing patients who use non-prescription medications to treat self-diagnosed disorders or symptoms, without consulting a medical practitioner and without any medical supervision. The objectives of this study are to identify patterns of self-medication in Saudi Arabia, to measure the association between gender and the use of non-prescribed medication, and to identify the type of medications involved, the dosages used, and patient’s sources of knowledge regarding the types, and doses of medications. METHOD: Cross-section analytical observational study, conducted in Al Medina city, Saudi Arabia, over 6 months using a pretested self-administered questionnaire using a convenience sampling technique. RESULTS: With a response rate of 68.8%, it was found that 72.5% reported the use of non-prescribed medication and 24.3% reported a history of experiencing side effects from using non-prescribed medication with no significant difference between male and female. 81% were keen to read the medication instruction with higher response among females.Analgesics were the most common type of medication used with an 86.5% agreement with no statistical significant differences between male and females. CONCLUSION: The study found heavy use of non-prescribed medication among the Al Medina residents sampled. This suggests a need for specialist training programs that could be directed at pharmacists, to help them disseminate information on the safe use of OTC or non-prescribed medications.
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spelling pubmed-61248332018-09-10 Frequency of use of non-prescribed medication among population sample from Al Madina City and its impact on quality of care in Saudi Arabia Mahrous, Mohamed Saad Int J Health Sci (Qassim) Original Article OBJECTIVE: Self-medication can be defined as the practice of using drugs that have not been prescribed, recommended, or controlled by a certified health-care professional. This term can be used when discussing patients who use non-prescription medications to treat self-diagnosed disorders or symptoms, without consulting a medical practitioner and without any medical supervision. The objectives of this study are to identify patterns of self-medication in Saudi Arabia, to measure the association between gender and the use of non-prescribed medication, and to identify the type of medications involved, the dosages used, and patient’s sources of knowledge regarding the types, and doses of medications. METHOD: Cross-section analytical observational study, conducted in Al Medina city, Saudi Arabia, over 6 months using a pretested self-administered questionnaire using a convenience sampling technique. RESULTS: With a response rate of 68.8%, it was found that 72.5% reported the use of non-prescribed medication and 24.3% reported a history of experiencing side effects from using non-prescribed medication with no significant difference between male and female. 81% were keen to read the medication instruction with higher response among females.Analgesics were the most common type of medication used with an 86.5% agreement with no statistical significant differences between male and females. CONCLUSION: The study found heavy use of non-prescribed medication among the Al Medina residents sampled. This suggests a need for specialist training programs that could be directed at pharmacists, to help them disseminate information on the safe use of OTC or non-prescribed medications. Qassim Uninversity 2018 /pmc/articles/PMC6124833/ /pubmed/30202401 Text en Copyright: © International Journal of Health Sciences http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0 This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Mahrous, Mohamed Saad
Frequency of use of non-prescribed medication among population sample from Al Madina City and its impact on quality of care in Saudi Arabia
title Frequency of use of non-prescribed medication among population sample from Al Madina City and its impact on quality of care in Saudi Arabia
title_full Frequency of use of non-prescribed medication among population sample from Al Madina City and its impact on quality of care in Saudi Arabia
title_fullStr Frequency of use of non-prescribed medication among population sample from Al Madina City and its impact on quality of care in Saudi Arabia
title_full_unstemmed Frequency of use of non-prescribed medication among population sample from Al Madina City and its impact on quality of care in Saudi Arabia
title_short Frequency of use of non-prescribed medication among population sample from Al Madina City and its impact on quality of care in Saudi Arabia
title_sort frequency of use of non-prescribed medication among population sample from al madina city and its impact on quality of care in saudi arabia
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6124833/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30202401
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